Regarding the weird title: this is one of several loosely associated "Stacks on Stacks" puzzles I made. I attempted later to tie them together in a coherent way, but the result was unsatisfying. This puzzle, however, absolutely stands on its own.
Normal sudoku rules apply.
Digits along an arrow must sum to the digit in the connected circle.
Symbols outside the grid are "Giant Kropki" clues for the indicated diagonals. Black clues point to "ratio diagonals". Light grey clues point to "consecutive diagonals". It is important to note that these descriptions do NOT apply to diagonally adjacent cells, but to the diagonal as a whole as follows:
F-Puzzles link: https://f-puzzles.com/?id=yhsjyxb8
Here are some valid and invalid examples. Green cells are valid. Red cells are invalid. Further clarification is provided below.
For ratio diagonals, the following groups of digits satisfy the ratio requirements:
In the examples above, the 1/4/8/4 diagonal is invalid because the 1 does not form a 1:2 ratio with any other digit on the diagonal. The 4/2/6/3/2/1 diagonal is invalid because although each digit is in a 1:2 ratio with another digit on the diagonal, there is no single continuous sequence of the digits with this property.
For consecutive diagonals, there are many valid groups of digits. The key idea is that there can be no "gap" of digits. Again, duplicate digits are no issue. The example invalid diagonal is invalid because it has no 7. Even though 9 is consecutive to 8 and 6 is consecutive to 5, the digits 5, 6, 8, and 9 do not form a single continuous consecutive sequence.
Solution code: 18 digit code: column 9 then row 8
on 28. March 2021, 09:04 by fritzdis
@argl
Glad you liked it! It's a new variant inspired by a comment on the CtC discord.
on 28. March 2021, 08:55 by argl
Really enjoyed this, hadn't done this variant before and thought it was really awesome how the Kropki diags interacted with the rest of the clues throughout the solve
on 27. March 2021, 17:50 by Polycarp
Excellent rule set idea. Perfectly implemented.
on 27. March 2021, 01:52 by fritzdis
Minor edit
on 27. March 2021, 01:48 by fritzdis
Further clarification